Witchy is a high fantasy comic set in an asia-based world where your magic ability is determined by the length of your hair. Nyneve, an uncharacteristically powerless witch, is thrown in the deep end when the army comes to enlist witches into their army.
Witchy is a brilliantly unique concept, aesthetically reminiscent of LOTR and HP - with soft, naiive-style art that tells the story perfectly.
Nyneve is a very deeply developed character, with steady character development from the get-go. She's determined, smart, and a fighter, but is also given time to be vulnerable and upset. She has a clear balance of faults and strengths. Generally, she's a very interesting and likable lead in a brilliant story.
the Sisters is strong women out the wazoo - centring around a family of 3 Irish-American witches who, thanks to their absent (likely satanist) parents, attract magical trouble like bees to a flower. This comic takes a frank, funny, modern look at magic without any of the Hogwarts glitter - a lack of which it makes up for in cartoon gore. This comic is like Gravity Falls if it stopped trying to be for kids.
The sisters in this comic spend most of their time either blowing something up, beating something up, or getting into effed up magical deals. They're blunt, crude, and really? They're assholes. The writer gives these women space to be messed up and angry, and make mistakes - and also to go loco, kill a few trolls, and save the day. They get all the depth and fallibility as male leads, with all the gore and violence.
aaaand gonna add a sneaky plug for There was a War, my comic, in which both leads are strong women. Balor and Cath are on opposites sides of a long, bloody, and confusing war, and their worlds collide when Balor is forced into indentured labour in her people's army, and Cath is taken prisoner as a working witch at the same keep. Together, they patch up holes in their histories and forge a new existence where they can both be themselves, entirely.
Both girls are complicated, flawed, resilient young women who fight through waves of traumatic setbacks for what's right, and for some kind of peace. They are given space to be wrong, to be angry, and to be happy in themselves.